🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1397 ARCHIVED:88446 CACHE:2562 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1396 ARCHIVED:88443 CACHE:2565 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Yeah, it’s a shitshow. MS overconfirms all my prejudices constantly.
Ignoring e-mail after lunch works great, though. :-)
Our timetracking is offline for over a week because of reasons. The responsible bunglers are falling by the skin of their teeth: ![]()
- The error message neither includes the timeframe nor a link to an announcement article.
- The HTML page needs to download JS in order to display the fucking error message.
- Proper HTTP status codes are clearly only for big losers.
- Despite being down, heaps of resources are still fetched.
I find it really fascinating how one can screw up on so many levels. This is developed inhouse, I’m just so glad that we’re not a software engineering company. Oh wait. How embarrassing.
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1395 ARCHIVED:88418 CACHE:2541 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
The Linux installation on my main PC turned 14 today:
$ head -n 1 /var/log/pacman.log
[2011-07-07 11:19] installed filesystem (2011.04-1)
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1394 ARCHIVED:88409 CACHE:2543 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1393 ARCHIVED:88408 CACHE:2543 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1392 ARCHIVED:88401 CACHE:2539 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1391 ARCHIVED:88396 CACHE:2535 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1390 ARCHIVED:87839 CACHE:2584 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1389 ARCHIVED:87827 CACHE:2584 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1388 ARCHIVED:87820 CACHE:2603 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1387 ARCHIVED:87814 CACHE:2599 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1386 ARCHIVED:87795 CACHE:2602 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1385 ARCHIVED:87790 CACHE:2604 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1384 ARCHIVED:87784 CACHE:2673 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1383 ARCHIVED:87781 CACHE:2688 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
We’re entering the “too hot to think”-season in 3, 2, 1 … and we’re live!
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1382 ARCHIVED:87766 CACHE:2684 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
I did a “lecture”/“workshop” about this at work today. 16-bit DOS, real mode. 💾 Pretty cool and the audience (devs and sysadmins) seemed quite interested. 🥳
- People used the Intel docs to figure out the instruction encodings.
- Then they wrote a little DOS program that exits with a return code and they used uhex in DOSBox to do that. Yes, we wrote a COM file manually, no Assembler involved. (Many of them had never used DOS before.)
- DEBUG from FreeDOS was used to single-step through the program, showing what it does.
- This gets tedious rather quickly, so we switched to SVED from SvarDOS for writing the rest of the program in Assembly language. nasm worked great for us.
- At the end, we switched to BIOS calls instead of DOS syscalls to demonstrate that the same binary COM file works on another OS. Also a good opportunity to talk about bootloaders a little bit.
- (I think they even understood the basics of segmentation in the end.)
The 8086 / 16-bit real-mode DOS is a great platform to explain a lot of the fundamentals without having to deal with OS semantics or executable file formats.
Now that was a lot of fun. 🥳 It’s very rare that we do something like this, sadly. I love doing this kind of low-level stuff.
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1381 ARCHIVED:87759 CACHE:2692 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1380 ARCHIVED:87754 CACHE:2699 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1379 ARCHIVED:87753 CACHE:2701 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
On my blog: Free Culture Book Club — First Woman — Dream to Reality https://john.colagioia.net/blog/2025/06/21/first-woman-1.html #freeculture #bookclub
Saw this on Mastodon:
https://racingbunny.com/@mookie/114718466149264471
18 rules of Software Engineering
- You will regret complexity when on-call
- Stop falling in love with your own code
- Everything is a trade-off. There’s no “best” 3. Every line of code you write is a liability 4. Document your decisions and designs
- Everyone hates code they didn’t write
- Don’t use unnecessary dependencies
- Coding standards prevent arguments
- Write meaningful commit messages
- Don’t ever stop learning new things
- Code reviews spread knowledge
- Always build for maintainability
- Ask for help when you’re stuck
- Fix root causes, not symptoms
- Software is never completed
- Estimates are not promises
- Ship early, iterate often
- Keep. It. Simple.
Solid list, even though 14 is up for debate in my opinion: Software can be completed. You have a use case / problem, you solve that problem, done. Your software is completed now. There might still be bugs and they should be fixed – but this doesn’t “add” to the program. Don’t use “software is never done” as an excuse to keep adding and adding stuff to your code.
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1378 ARCHIVED:87729 CACHE:2694 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com I use Alt+. all the time, it’s great. 👌
FWIW, another thing I often use is !! to recall the entire previous command line:
$ find -iname '*foo*'
./This is a foo file.txt
$ cat "$(!!)"
cat "$(find -iname '*foo*')"
This is just a test.
Yep!
Or:
$ ls -al subdir
ls: cannot open directory 'subdir': Permission denied
$ sudo !!
sudo ls -al subdir
total 0
drwx------ 2 root root 60 Jun 20 19:39 .
drwx------ 7 jess jess 360 Jun 20 19:39 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 0 Jun 20 19:39 nothing-to-see
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1377 ARCHIVED:87719 CACHE:2687 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
On my blog: Real Life in Star Trek, Gambit part 1 https://john.colagioia.net/blog/2025/06/19/gambit-part-1.html #scifi #startrek #closereading
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1376 ARCHIVED:87698 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
@prologic@twtxt.net I’m trying to call some libc functions (because the Rust stdlib does not have an equivalent for getpeername(), for example, so I don’t have a choice), so I have to do some FFI stuff and deal with raw pointers and all that, which is very gnarly in Rust – because you’re not supposed to do this. Things like that are trivial in C or even Assembler, but I have not yet understood what Rust does under the hood. How and when does it allocate or free memory … is the pointer that I get even still valid by the time I do the libc call? Stuff like that.
I hope that I eventually learn this over time … but I get slapped in the face at every step. It’s very frustrating and I’m always this 🤏 close to giving up (only to try again a year later).
Oh, yeah, yeah, I guess I could “just” use some 3rd party library for this. socket2 gets mentioned a lot in this context. But I don’t want to. I literally need one getpeername() call during the lifetime of my program, I don’t even do the socket(), bind(), listen(), accept() dance, I already have a fully functional file descriptor. Using a library for that is total overkill and I’d rather do it myself. (And look at the version number: 0.5.10. The library is 6 years old but they’re still saying: “Nah, we’re not 1.0 yet, we reserve the right to make breaking changes with every new release.” So many Rust libs are still unstable …)
… and I could go on and on and on … 🤣
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1375 ARCHIVED:87691 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1374 ARCHIVED:87681 CACHE:2671 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1373 ARCHIVED:87677 CACHE:2676 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
So I was using this function in Rust:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/path/struct.Path.html#method.display
Note the little 1.0.0 in the top right corner, which means that this function has been “stable since Rust version 1.0.0”. We’re at 1.87 now, so we’re good.
Then I compiled my program on OpenBSD with Rust 1.86, i.e. just one version behind, but well ahead of 1.0.0.
The compiler said that I was using an unstable library feature.
Turns out, that function internally uses this:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ffi/struct.OsStr.html#method.display
And that is only available since Rust 1.87.
How was I supposed to know this? 🤨
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1372 ARCHIVED:87663 CACHE:2673 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1371 ARCHIVED:87645 CACHE:2661 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1370 ARCHIVED:87623 CACHE:2689 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1369 ARCHIVED:87615 CACHE:2689 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
🧮 USERS:1 FEEDS:2 TWTS:1368 ARCHIVED:87599 CACHE:2702 FOLLOWERS:22 FOLLOWING:14
New oil and gas fields incompatible with Paris climate goals
Opening any new North Sea oil and gas fields is incompatible with achieving the Paris Climate Agreement goals of limiting warming to 1.5°C or holding warming to “well below 2°C” relative to preindustrial levels, finds a new report published by UCL academics. ⌘ Read more
GraphQL Gatecrash: When an Introspection Query Opened the Whole Backend ️
Free Link 🎈
[Continue reading on InfoSec Write-ups »](https://infosecwriteups.com/graphql-gatecrash-when-an-intro … ⌘ Read more
Practical study material OSWP Part 1: WPA2-PSK Walkthrough ⌘ Read more
Could XSS Be the Hidden Key to Account Takeover
What if I told you that a simple Cross-Site Scripting (XSS) vulnerability could be the golden ticket to a full Account Takeover (ATO)? No…
[Continue reading on InfoSec Write-ups »](https://infosecwriteups … ⌘ Read more
Crafting Standalone Python Proof of Concept Exploits
Creating standalone proof of concept exploits implementing a zero-to-hero method, requiring a single action to run.
[Continue reading on InfoSec Write-ups »](https://infosecwriteups.com/craf … ⌘ Read more
$560 Bounty: How Twitter’s Android App Leaked User Location
A Silent Broadcast That Let Any App Spy on You Without Asking
[Continue reading on InfoSec Write-ups »](https://infosecwriteups.com/560-bounty-how-twitters-android-app-leaked- … ⌘ Read more
Radxa UFS/eMMC Module Reader and Storage Solution Enables Fast Flashing and Scalable Embedded Storage
Radxa’s UFS/eMMC Module Reader is a compact USB 3.0 adapter for flashing OS images, accessing firmware, and transferring large files. It supports both eMMC v5.0 and UFS 2.1 modules with speeds up to 5 Gbps The adapter is compatible with eMMC and UFS modules from Radxa, and also works with modules from platforms like PINE64 and […] ⌘ Read more